Dr. Breggin acts as a medical expert in criminal, malpractice and product liability suits, often involving adverse drug effects such as suicide, violence, brain injury, death, and tardive dyskinesia. A review of Dr. Breggin's forensic work can be found at Legal Cases. He began testifying in the early 1970s and has been qualified in court 85 times or more since 1987.

Dr. Breggin is a Harvard-trained psychiatrist and former full-time consultant at NIMH. Dr. Breggin's private practice is in Ithaca, New York where he treats adults, couples, and families with children. He has a subspecialty in clinical psychopharmacology, including adverse drug effects and psychiatric drug withdrawal.

Special Topics

Dr. Peter Breggin often acts as a medical expert in criminal, malpractice, product liability and class action suits, and since the 1970s has testified in approximately 100 trials. Most of his cases settle before trial. However, a list of more than 80 trials in which he has testified 1986 are found in the final section of his Resume.

Blunting ourselves with drugs is not the answer to overwhelming emotions. Intense emotions should be welcomed. Emotions are the vital signs of life. We need and should want them to be strong. We also need our brains and minds to be functioning at their best, free of toxic drugs. That allows us to use our intelligence and understanding to the fullest. Thinking clearly is one of the hallmarks of taking charge of oneself instead of caving in to helplessness.

Throughout his career, Dr. Breggin has
been especially concerned about the psychiatric abuse of children and
the failure to provide more effective solutions through improved
parenting, educational reform and community resources. As the drug
companies and organized psychiatry have sought larger markets for
pharmaceutical products, children have come under extensive from the
psychopharmaceutical complex. The first great assault took place in
the form of diagnosing children with ADHD and then medicating them
with stimulant drugs. Soon millions of children were defined as
mentally dysfunctional or defective and were submitted to
brain-damaging psychoactive medications.

See Dr. Breggin's new ECT Resources Center
with more than 125 annotated scientific articles, glossary of searchable terms
and a brochure for patients and families.

ECT (electroconvulsive treatment) damages the brain and mind. In many cases, it results in huge permanent gaps in memory for important life events, educational background, and professional skills. The individual may even lose his or her identity. Even when much less harm is done, individuals continue to suffer from ongoing cognitive difficulties with learning and remembering new things, and with unwanted changes in their personalities. Dr. Breggin has now created a free ECT Resources Center that includes (1) a brochure for patients, families, and advocates, (2) introductory scientific articles that cover the field of ECT-induced harm to the brain and mind, and (3) more than 125 articles about ECT with search terms such as "brain damage," "memory loss," "women," and "abuse." The ECT Resources Center will help introduce newcomers to the field and provide research materials for advanced researchers as well.

The acronym ECT stands for "ElectroConvulsive Therapy" (also called EST, for ElectroShock Therapy) a psychiatric treatment in which electricity
is applied to the head and passed through the brain to produce a grand
mal or major convulsion. The seizure brought about by the electric stimulus
closely resembles, but is more rigorous or strenuous than that found
in idiopathic epilepsy or in epilepsy following a wide variety of insults
to the brain.

Patients given ECT are administered an electric current of sufficient
intensity and duration to produce an acute organic brain syndrome,
characterized by the classic symptoms of disorientation to time, place,
and person; mental deterioration in all intellectual spheres such as
abstract reasoning, judgment, and insight; emotional lability with
extremes of apathy or euphoria; and overall childlike helplessness.

Psychosurgery is the destruction of normal brain tissue for the purpose of
treating psychiatric disorders or for the control of emotions and behavior.
It does not include operations, such as those for Parkinson's disease
or epilepsy, where an identifiable physical abnormality in the brain is causing
a known physical disorder.

Lobotomy and other psychosurgeries merit special attention
because, as the prototype of brain-damaging therapeutics, they can shed
light on the clinical effects of other brain-disabling treatments such
as electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) and major tranquilizers. Despite
the paucity of active practitioners and advocates of psychosurgery,
many psychiatric authorities have condoned this treatment precisely
because the principles that find their extreme expression in lobotomy
and other forms of psychosurgery also find more subtle expression in
all the major somatic treatments in psychiatry.

The widespread
diagnosing of children is a subtle form of social control that
suppresses children rather than providing them with what they need to
fulfill their basic needs in the home, school and family. For more
information about social control and youngsters see the Children's
section under Special Topics and Children's section under Scientific
Papers, and well as several of Dr. Breggin's books, especially Brain-Disabling Treatments in Psychiatry (1998). Dr. Breggin's blogs often address current children's issues.In Toxic Psychiatry (1991) Dr. Breggin addresses the psychiatric oppression of women.

Both
Peter Breggin and Ginger Breggin have worked extensively to stop racist
psychiatric programs of social control, especially those aimed at
subuding inner city children. These successful reform projects are described in detail in their book, The War Against Children of Color (1998).The following article is based on the book and presents a summary of their efforts.

Most psychiatric drugs can cause withdrawal reactions, sometimes including life-threatening emotional and physical withdrawal problems. In short, it is not only dangerous to start taking psychiatric drugs, it can also be dangerous to stop them. Withdrawal from psychiatric drugs should be done carefully under experienced clinical supervision. Methods for safely withdrawing from psychiatric drugs are discussed in Dr. Breggin's new book, Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal: A Guide for Prescribers, Therapists, Patients, and Their Families.